Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Goguma (Korean Sweet Potato) Cake


Goguma cake is something you often see at Korean cafes but I've never seen a recipe for it. (Of course, I've only been searching English language sites—there must be some very good ones on the Korean language ones.) Undeterred, I decided to MacGyver up a recipe. I mean, how hard could it be? After all, gogumas, or Korean sweet potatoes, aren't too far off from bananas, so wouldn't a banana cake recipe work just as well? After some research, I had a hunch that the most workable banana cake recipe would be Martha Adams's version in Cooking From Quilt Country. It uses cake flour and turns out a very light, wonderful cake.

Of course, I ended up having to substitute more than just the bananas—I didn't have buttermilk. But lack of buttermilk is never a deal-breaker. I've always found that a combo of yogurt and half-and-half does a pretty good job as a buttermilk sub, and those two things were luckily in the fridge. Now the only difficulty in making this cake is that you have to have precooked gogumas. I had some leftover from a couple of days before, and really, it was trying to figure out what to do with it that led me to making this cake.

In case you've never eaten a Korean (or Japanese) sweet potato, let me warn you that it is very different from American red sweet potatoes (sometimes called yams). A goguma's flesh is light golden and its sweetness is more delicate, less in-your-face. And there's a natural buttery richness so that if you simply roast one, you can eat it plain. Fantastic as part of a tempura platter too.

Another warning: this cake recipe is a bit more involved than a banana cake recipe because you need to put the cooked goguma through a sieve (chinoise) otherwise you just end up with too much fiber in the cake.

So, here we go!

Adapted from Cooking From Quilt Country by Marcia Adams

Goguma Cake

2/3 cup of butter
1 cup sugar
3 eggs at room temperature
2 1/4 cups of sifted cake flour
1 1/4 teaspoons of baking powder
1 1/4 teaspoons of baking soda
1 1/4 teaspoons of salt
2/3 cup of buttermilk at room temperature (or a combination of plain yogurt and milk or half-and-half)
1 1/4 cups goguma, cooked, mashed, and sieved
2/3 cup of chopped walnuts

Preheat your oven to 350 degrees. Cream the butter and sugar until fluffy. Add the eggs one at a time, beating well. Sift the dry ingredients together. Add a third to the butter mixture and beat. Then add a third of the buttermilk (or sub) and beat. Then a third of the dry, then a third of the wet, etc. Add walnuts, mix, put in a pan (I used a brownie pan but you can use two cake pans) and bake.

In a brownie pan, the cake should take about thirty minutes, depending on your oven. You want to keep the cake pretty light and tender, so check after twenty. I always use a cake tester. Of course, you are perfectly free to frost the cake if you wish (any type of frosting will do), but I like mine with just a dusting of powdered sugar.

4 comments:

  1. what's up not julia,

    i was online for a goguma cake recipe and found your blog. it appears that we both did not know what to do with leftover sweet potato mash and went for the same solution.

    i didn't have goguma but a similar satsuma-imo japanese sweet potato. using a combination of your recipe and another one based on what i had--
    2 eggs
    1.5 cup of flour
    a cup of sugar
    1 tsp of baking powder
    1/4 tsp baking soda
    about a cup of mashed sweet potato
    about a cup's worth of thick yogurt, milk, and some applesauce to make up for a missing egg
    some salt

    --i put the cake batter in a 350 oven for 30 minutes.

    but the resulting cake was so thin and heavy--like way dense--i am wondering if i was using the 1 cup measurement instead of the 1/2 cup measurement when i put 3 scoops of flour into the dry mix. if you care (please do not feel obliged to respond to my boredom-driven blogspot comment), do you have any idea what might have gone wrong? do you know of any witchcraft science cookery as far as proportions of baking ingredients go to give me a more intuitive sense of baking? i did the whole alternating wet dry thing and noticed it getting mad thick pretty early. hmm what else. meh that's about it as far as explanations go.

    it doesn't even really matter because it tastes good. i was just craving a fluffy medium dense cake but ended up getting a really heavy chewy disk. the thought of it still in the fridge is making me kind of sad. at this point i am just pretending it is a brownie dduk fusion to make myself feel less disturbed about whatever it is i made.

    anyway, yer blog is funny and chill. i'm going to try making corn pancakes a la bindae duk because it sounds bomb.

    sincerely,
    paul

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  2. Well, Paul, the problem with baking is that you have to be pretty precise in your measurements. Unlike a recipe for a stew, a cake recipe is pretty dangerous to fool around with. Reading over what you said about the batter getting too thick, it does sound like you didn't have enough wet ingredients.

    Also, ingredients can be critical. Like did you use cake flour? All-purpose flour is not the same. Cake flour ensures a very light, fluffy cake. All-purpose flour is pretty tough. I mean, you can't even make biscuits with all-purpose flour. And I noticed that you didn't use butter. Fat of some kind, either butter or shortening, is pretty critical in a cake recipe. Also, is your baking powder fresh? Old baking powder will not leaven a cake.

    Sorry your recipe didn't work out the way you had hoped.

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  3. Is the temperature in farenheit or celcius?

    ReplyDelete